People v. Sutton

62 P.2d 397, 17 Cal. App. 2d 561, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 617
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1936
DocketCrim. 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 62 P.2d 397 (People v. Sutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Sutton, 62 P.2d 397, 17 Cal. App. 2d 561, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 617 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

The appellant, Fallie Sutton, was charged jointly with Louis Sly and LeRoy Bussey with the crime of murder. They entered pleas of not guilty, and Sly and Sutton interposed additional pleas of not guilty by reason of insanity. The trio were tried together, and the jury found Bussey not guilty, and Sly and Sutton guilty of first degree murder and assessed their punishment at life imprisonment. Thereupon, Sly and Sutton withdrew their pleas of not guilty by reason of insanity, and when arraigned for judgment Sutton alone made a motion for new trial. The motion was denied, and each was sentenced to life imprisonment in conformity with the verdict of the jury. From said judgment of conviction and the order denying his motion for new trial Sutton alone prosecutes this appeal.

The victim of the killing, A. W. Knight, was eighty-five years old and quite feeble. For a number of years he had been living alone in a small ark on the waterfront bordering the town of Antioch, Contra Costa County and Bussey lived in an ark next to and a few feet distant from Knight’s ark. About 11 o’clock on the morning of February 15, 1936, a neighbor while passing Knight’s ark noticed the front door thereof had been broken, and fearing something might have happened to the aged man she entered and found him in a dazed, stuporous condition and unable to speak, as the result of having been beaten about the face and head. She summoned the police and he was removed to a hospital where the extent of his injuries was ascertained. His face and head were a mass of swollen bruises and abrasions. His eyes were blackened, and swollen nearly shut; Ms ears were bruised, lacerated and swollen, and there was a cut over one of them. His jaw was badly broken in several places, Ms skull was fractured, and he was bleeding at the mouth, nose and ears. About a week later he succumbed to Ms injuries without having regained consciousness.

The evidence shows that on the afternoon preceding the finding of Knight in the battered condition above described, *564 the three defendants spent most of the afternoon and evening in Bussey’s ark drinking claret wine; and at the outset of appellant’s brief he admits that “as an aftermath of that party” he and his two companions entered Knight’s ark and that Knight “was killed by one or more of said three people”. He contends, however, that there is no legal proof that he personally struck any of the blows which caused Knight’s death, and that therefore his conviction is not legally supported; and he further contends that in any event the evidence against him establishes no greater crime than manslaughter and that the judgment of conviction as to him should be reduced accordingly. There is no merit in either of the foregoing contentions.

After having established by ample evidence, direct and circumstantial, that the deceased met his death through criminal agency, the prosecution introduced its testimony to connect the three defendants with the commission of the crime. It consisted in part of the declarations and admissions made by them to the officers on the day following the assault and within a day or two thereafter; and as the testimony was being received the trial court properly admonished the jury, repeatedly, that the declarations of one defendant made out of the presence of the others, subsequent to the assault, could be considered only as against the one making the declarations and must not for any purpose be taken as evidence against the other two. The final statements made by the respective defendants as to what happened that afternoon and evening were substantially alike except as will be hereafter noted; and the following are the facts as they appear therefrom: The defendants met at Bussey’s ark about noon, and after consuming the first supply of wine which Sly had purchased, the defendants went up town and purchased more wine with money obtained from the sale of a gold-crowned tooth belonging to appellant which had been recently extracted. Returning to Bussey’s ark they continued to drink and ate some sandwiches which Bussey had purchased. When the second supply of wine was about gone they talked about buying more, but evidently were without funds; whereupon Bussey suggested that Knight had a gun in his ark which he had no use for; and shortly after the suggestion was made they proceeded to get it. Sly went over to Knight’s ark first but was unable to gain entrance, and he *565 talked with Knight through the closed door. That was before dark. Later on, during the evening, Sly again went over there for the same purpose. Appellant accompanied him and they took an axe along with them; and when Knight refused to let them in or give them the gun they broke down the door with the axe and entered. Knight still refused to let them have the gun or tell them where he kept it, whereupon he was beaten about the head and face. He fell or was. knocked down, but the beating continued until he could hardly speak. All he could do was to mumble his words. There is a conflict between the statements made by Bussey and appellant as to whether Bussey was with Sly and appellant when they entered Knight’s ark. Appellant said he was, but Bussey claimed that he fell asleep in his ark while the drinking was going on and was awakened by the hollering over at Knight’s ark; that he went over there, and found Knight lying partly on the floor and partly on the bed, wounded and bleeding; that appellant was standing beside Knight saying, “Come on and tell me where it is”; and the only reply the old man made was, “Go away, go away”. Bussey then said, according to his statement, “What in hell is the matter”, and after lighting a match he and appellant lifted Knight on the bed. About this time, so, Bussey claimed, Sly, who was standing at the door of the ark, came in and said: “Didn’t the old son-of-a-biteh tell you where it is yet?” and he told Bussey to look around for the gun, which he proceeded to do, but while he was doing so appellant and Sly began striking Knight about the head and face with their hands and with a hard leather gun holster about a foot long, and according to Bussey, appellant also used a hatchet handle. Finally Bussey told them to let Knight alone, and to “get the hell out of there”; whereupon all of them left. Sly went home; but Bussey and appellant went up town, and after loitering around a liquor tavern for a while, they also went to their homes.

Appellant’s final version of the affair as told to the officers did not differ materially from the foregoing except he claimed he did not strike Knight at all. He admitted breaking into the ark with Sly for the avowed purpose of getting the gun, and he also admitted being present when Knight was beaten for refusing to give up the gun or to reveal its whereabouts; but he claimed that Sly committed all of the violence.

*566 In corroboration of the facts and circumstances thus established by the declarations of the defendants, the prosecution introduced the testimony of a number of disinterested witnesses. A man named Worrell who. dropped in during the afternoon and drank some wine with the defendants, but who left about 5 o’clock, testified that just before he left Sly went over to Knight’s ark, stating he was going to get the gun; and Worrell and two other witnesses testified that they saw Sly trying to get into Knight’s ark and heard him talking to Knight through the closed door; and one of them heard him say as he returned to Bussey’s ark, “You can’t even scare the old fool”.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P.2d 397, 17 Cal. App. 2d 561, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sutton-calctapp-1936.